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Tag: NHL Expansion Draft

NMCs Causing All Sorts Of Expansion Speculation

Never before has the NHL world cared more about No Movement Clauses. The most obvious candidate to waive his NMC, Marc-Andre Fleury signed his paperwork after his third ring-fitting. Others like Dion Phaneuf were asked, and though it’s expected he declines, we may have to wait to see the lists to get the final answer.

With the buyout period looming and roster lockdown a few days away, NHL clubs are scrambling to get prepared for the Expansion Draft. However, some teams appear willing to stand pat and take their Vegas lumps.

In Florida, the first reports were that Panthers front office had asked defenseman Keith Yandle to waive his NMC. The 30-year-old signed a seven-year deal last offseason and apparently Florida was willing to chance him in expansion. Updated reports now confirm Yandle was never asked and will not be exposed. Out guess, Yandle was asked, politely declined, and then the team covered his back by saying they never asked.

Either way, Yandle’s exposure would’ve created an interesting dilemma. Had the Golden Knights selected the All-Star defenseman they could’ve scored big in a flip. Established teams are desperate for blueliners and a rock like Yandle would draw plenty of interest. Or, with the long term deal, would the Golden Knights have thought to keep him and make him part of their “Cup in 6” plans.

Other notable players with NMC’s that were not asked to waive; Marc Staal, Dan Girardi, Andrew Ladd, Johnny Boychuk, Zdeno Chara, David Backes.

A lot of things are out of my control right now. I don’t know what other teams are discussing with regard to expansion and Vegas. I know what I’d like to do, but we’ll see how it plays out. -Steve Yzerman, Tampa GM

In Tampa, despite speculation, the Lightning did not ask Ryan Callahan to waive his NMC. Reports are GM Steve Yzerman reached out to the Golden Knights and is interested in protecting more players in exchange for picks. The Lightning are also rumored to be shopping stud Jonathon Drouin possibly for a defenseman in Anaheim or Minnesota. Opposing GM’s are calling McPhee but they’re texting one another as well. But even if teams make offers to the Wild it doesn’t mean they’ll agree to a deal prior to the roster lockdown.

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Adidas/NHL Jersey Unveil June 20th At Wynn

The wait for jerseys just got one day shorter. An email to the media confirmed a special event at Intrique at the Wynn on June 20th to unveil Adidas’ versions of the NHL jerseys.

The event will put on display all 31 teams new Adidas branded jerseys. Yes, that would indeed include the Golden Knights jerseys. The event is not open to the public.

The Armory, the team store at T-Mobile Arena, is slated to open June 21st to coincide with the Expansion Draft and Awards.

While the jerseys will be shown off in two weeks, they will not be available to buy, wear, and bring home. The team is planning a pre-order process that will begin at the Expansion Draft and afterwards. They expect jerseys to be available for sale in mid-September.

That’s all we know at the moment, but expect more events to come as the Golden Knights and the NHL prepare for what will be an historic week in Vegas.

NHL Releases List Of Veterans Exempt From The Expansion Draft

Historically one of the ways expansion teams have “punted” on draft picks has been by selecting veteran players who will never actually play for the new team. It allows the expansion team to essentially pass on a pick and not have to take on the salary of a player from all 30 NHL teams.

The league has taken the draft and discard strategy in mind this year and is attempting to curb it by making some of the possible options exempt from the draft. Today, the league released the list of veteran players exempt from the draft. Here is the full list according to Craig Custance.

Dave Bolland (Arizona)
Craig Cunningham (Arizona)
Chris Pronger (Arizona)
Cody McCormick (Buffalo)
David Clarkson (Columbus)
Johan Franzen (Detroit)
Joe Vitale (Detroit)
Ryane Clowe (New Jersey)
Mikhail Grabovski (Islanders)
Pascal Dupuis (Penguins)
Nathan Horton (Toronto)
Stephane Robidas (Toronto)

(Clarkson and Horton have NMC’s. They will not be required to waive the NMC’s as they are now automatically exempt from the protection process)

All 12 players on the list are out with extended injuries and likely won’t play in 2017-18. Therfore, McPhee cannot select them just to soak up their salary to reach the 60% limit.

That’s not the only way to skirt the rule stating the Golden Knights must pick a player from every single current NHL team.

What we have to be careful of is drafting an unrestricted free agent without having a contract in place. We are not gong to do that unless we are prepared to lose the player. It’s a throw away pick. Let’s assume it’s a team that doesn’t have much, and we don’t want to take on a big contract, you can just take on an unrestricted free agent and not sign him, do no harm to the organization with a bad contract. –George McPhee, GM

Vegas could select an unrestricted or restricted free agent and never offer them a deal. That keeps them out of a bad contract, but it won’t count towards the 60%.

This list today proves the league is getting smarter with Expansion Draft shenanigans. In the end it probably won’t hinder McPhee too much, but it does take away one possible avenue.

**Former Assistant GM for the Minnesota Wild and author of the book How To Bake An NHL Franchise From Scratch, Tom Lynn, joined the SinBin.vegas Podcast and explained exactly how/why drafting an injured player makes sense in the Expansion Draft. ** (2 minute clip below, full podcast here)

Rest And Endurance Should Be Key Factors In Expansion Draft

I’ve recently become obsessed with work to rest ratio in the NHL. Rest is important to working folks of all levels. Heck, Santa Claus takes a 1/364 work to rest ratio every year. All bodies need the proper rest or you won’t get the maximum effort. NHL players even more so.

NHL games are extremely physical and tiring, we all know that. Add in the fact that there’s 82 of them, ten-game road trips, cross country trips and back-to-backs. It all adds up to a very tired team come April. For Vegas there are obvious ways to track a players stamina; average time on ice, average games per year, production on the road and back to backs. Being located in the Southwest, the Golden Knights will have a tough travel schedule. The Kings, Sharks and Canucks all have 16 back-to-backs this season, so Vegas can expect something similar next year.

Targeting players with endurance would be a nice addition to the Golden Knights. To compare two potential expansion players; Andrew Cogliano’s 741 game iron man streak, whereas Nino Niederreiter has struggled on back-to-backs. In the end, my guess is George McPhee will point his focus more on overall talent than endurance, but it definitely shouldn’t be something that’s simply overlooked like it often is in free agency.

Most NHL players have incredible stamina and are among the best athletes in the world. But you’ve seen it, every NHL team throws up a stinker from time to time.

The last thing an expansion team needs is a tough schedule. The Knights are going to need enough energy as it is. It’d be nice if the league took care of their new team as best it can when it comes to schedule making, but as fans, we should hope the GM does his best to build a team ready to combat the rigors of the current NHL schedule.

And hopefully, opposing players really do gamble and get drunk on the Strip the night before a game. That’d be nice too.

Expansion Misses Might Hurt

The name William Karlsson and the word “regression” have been joined at the hip this offseason. Following his breakout season scoring 43 goals, posting a +49 rating, winning the Lady Byng, and finishing top 10 in both Selke and Hart, it seems like everyone assumes a decline in 2018-19.

Personally, I’m not a fan of assumptions, I prefer facts, or at least stats I can package as something resembling facts. So, I set out to first see if regression for William Karlsson is indeed inevitable as everyone says, and second if it is to see how much we should expect him to regress.

The normal way to project a player’s statistics in the NHL (or any sport for that matter) is to look at that player’s career history. However, with Karlsson that doesn’t really work. To begin his career he was seeing minimal ice time, playing on the fourth line, and had defensive responsibilities similar to those of Pierre-Edouard Bellemare’s on the Golden Knights. In Vegas, he’s the top line center, is used in all situations including the top power play and penalty kill units, and plays on a line with two high-level offensive players. His stats in Columbus are essentially hogwash because his role has changed so much, but at the same time, simply using his one mega season in Vegas feels like a bit too small of a sample size to project his future.

So, I had to find another way. The way I chose to go about it was to look at players who have had seasons in which they put up similar numbers in individual categories as Karlsson. In other words, players who have scored 40+ goals, or 30+ even strength goals, or had a 20+% shooting percentage. I even looked a bit into awards like the Hart, Selke, and Lady Byng.

What I found, in short, is that there’s basically no chance William Karlsson repeats his incredible 17-18 season. Literally, every player (except one) who scored 40 goals, every player who shot better than 20%, every player with a massive +/- rating, every player with a high shooting percentage, every player with impressive defensive numbers, and even every Lady Byng winner sees their stats decline that particular category following year.

I’ll prove it in a second, but before you go jumping off the cliff, while the numbers suggest a drop-off, they do not suggest Karlsson’s going to become an average player. Instead, they show just the opposite. I’ll show my work in a moment but using this method of comparing players with similar statistical seasons to Karlsson, he should be projected to score 35 goals, shoot at around 16%, and stay a legitimate Selke award candidate.

Here’s how I conducted the study. First, I found every season in which a player matched (or led the league) in the best statistical categories for William Karlsson. Those are Goals (Karlsson had 43), Shooting Percentage (Karlsson shot 23.4%), Plus/Minus (Karlsson was +49), Even Strength Goals (Karlsson had 31), and Defensive Point Shares (Karlsson had 3.5). Karlsson either led the league or came very close to doing so in all five categories.

After finding all players who had qualifying seasons, I found out what they did in that same category the following year. I added up all of the follow up season numbers and divided it by the Karlsson-esque season numbers to show the percentage of regression to be expected in each category. Here are the numbers.

Goals

YearGoalsFollowing Season
Auston Matthews16-17

40

34

Nikita Kucherov16-17

40

39

Sidney Crosby16-17

44

29

Vladimir Tarasenko15-16

40

39

Jamie Benn15-16

41

26

Patrick Kane15-16

46

34

Alex Ovechkin15-16

50

33

Rick Nash14-15

42

15

Steven Stamkos14-15

43

36

Alex Ovechkin14-15

53

50

Joe Pavelski13-14

41

37

Corey Perry13-14

43

33

Alex Ovechkin13-14

51

53

574

458

Regression = 20.2%

Shooting Percentage

YearPercentageFollowing Season
T.J Oshie16-17

23.1

14.2

Paul Byron16-17

22.9

17.4

Arten Anisimov16-17

21.0

15.4

Mark Scheifele16-17

20.0

18.4

Zach Smith15-17

20.7

11.7

Adam Henrique15-16

20.1

14.1

Alex Tanguey14-15

21.2

11.3

Tyler Bozak13-14

21.1

14.9

Steven Stamkos13-14

20.2

16.0

190.3

133.4

Regression = 29.9%

Plus/Minus

YearPercentageFollowing Season
Ryan Suter16-17

34

-1

Jason Zucker16-17

34

8

Tyler Toffoli15-16

35

6

Nikita Kucherov14-15

38

9

Max Pacioretty14-15

39

-10

David Krejci13-14

39

7

Patrice Bergeron13-14

38

2

Brad Marchand13-14

36

5

293

26

Regression = 91.1%

Defensive Point Shares

YearPercentageFollowing Season
Connor McDavid16-17

3.0

2.6

Brad Marchand16-17

2.8

2.5

Henrik Zetterberg16-17

2.7

2.0

Jason Zucker16-17

2.5

1.7

Anze Kopitar15-16

3.3

1.9

Joe Pavelski15-16

3.0

2.4

Tyler Toffoli15-16

3.0

1.8

Mac Pacioretty14-15

3.4

1.3

Jonathan Toews14-15

3.2

2.4

Blake Wheeler14-15

2.7

2.1

29.6

20.7

Regression = 30.1%

Even Strength Goals

YearPercentageFollowing Season
Auston Matthews16-17

32

29

Sidney Crosby16-17

30

20

Jeff Skinner16-17

30

20

Vladimir Tarasenko16-17

30

27

Alex Ovechkin15-16

31

16

Rick Nash14-15

32

11

Steven Stamkos14-15

30

21

Corey Perry13-14

35

29

250

173

Regression = 30.8%

As you can see in the tables, regression is essentially inevitable. Aside from Alex Ovechkin’s 2013-14 to 2014-15 season every single player declined every single season following their massive breakout in that category. It’s pretty astounding actually that only one of the 48 players listed outdid their previous year.

That to me is conclusive evidence to say that Karlsson would have to be super-human to repeat his numbers in just one of the five categories, let alone all five.

However, when we use the regression percentages based on averages, here’s how Karlsson’s numbers come out.

Last SeasonProjected
Goals

43

34.3

Shooting Percentage

23.4

16.4

Plus/Minus

49

4.3

D Point Shares

3.5

2.4

Even Strength Goals

31

21.5

Add it all up, and that’s a heck of a year. When you throw in the 2.4 defensive point shares, Karlsson should be a Selke candidate once again.

This is obviously a very inexact science and was only projected using the past five years, but just take a look at the names on each of the lists. Even though there were drop-offs across the board, almost every guy, with the exception of Rick Nash, put in a pretty darn good season following up the massive one.

It’s ludicrous to say that William Karlsson isn’t going to experience a level of regression in 2018-19. In fact, it’s reasonable to even say that regression is going to be drastic. However, it’s just as ludicrous, if not more, to suggest Karlsson will be anything but a high-end center and a defensive stalwart next year.

***

Any time you look back at a draft there will always be a few head shakers. Of course there will be busts at the top of the draft, but it’s the missed opportunities that tend to haunt GM’s and fans alike.

Like Patrick Roy being selected 51st in 1984, Luce Robitaille 171st that same year, or Jamie Benn going 129th in 2007. The what could have Benn’s (nailed it) are never ending.

The problem is this isn’t only an Entry Draft problem. Take it first hand from a former Expansion Draft GM.

Buffalo had protected Grant Fuhr and left exposed a goalie they’d picked up in a trade with Chicago—this guy that nobody had seen much or liked. That was Dominik Hasek. So, I like to think that we did a good job with Guy (Hebert) and other things that we did. Did we miss one? Sure. But you can’t look back and say, ‘What if?’ -Jack Ferreira, Inaugural GM for both the Sharks and Ducks

Ouch.

Odds are heavily against George McPhee making a mistake at least somewhat similar to that one by Ferreira. The fact of the matter is there will be over 1,000 players available to McPhee, and he only gets to select 30, and probably keep only 20-25 of them.

And to think, three days later McPhee has to participate in the ultimate crap shoot, the Entry Draft.

One time when I was playing poker at the Venetian. An older gentleman sat down next to me and put a wooden box on the table in front of him. Me being an idiot, I said, “Hey buddy, what’s that box?” He said, “It’s a magical luck box, I got it when I was a kid, and it’s brought me good luck ever since.” Needless to say, that dude took all the money I had in my pocket that day. The moral of the story though, in order to avoid these draft debacles, George McPhee needs to find that guy, and steal the lucky box.

It’s really the only guaranteed way to be safe.

“Make All Kinds Of Deals With Clubs” – Former Expansion GM’s Advice

Sportsnet’s Gare Joyce, noted friend of Vegas GM George McPhee, launched a new series on Canadian giant’s website today called What To Expect When You’re Expanding. The idea of the series, much like the baby books, is to gather stories from former Expansion GM’s so McPhee can see “how good he and his team have it.”

The first in the series was a set of stories from former Atlanta Flames general manager Cliff Fletcher. His story includes whining about being hired too late, not having a staff, competing with another team, competing with another league, being forced to take bad players, wanting to trade all his players, and much more. Sounds like a lot of bitching, and it is, but it’s a good read, trust me.

At the end of the story Fletcher, who went on to win a Stanley Cup in 1989 and was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2004, offers up a paragraph of advice for McPhee. Once you sort through the parts where he complains about the Flames situation, you end up with one strong piece of wisdom.

Still, the key things are the fact that there’s fewer players teams can protect [and that] Vegas is coming in alone. He has an opportunity to make all kinds of deals with clubs. -Cliff Fletcher, Atlanta Flames founding GM

Deals, deals, and more deals! And we’re going to win!

But seriously, Fletcher’s point is spot on. Once the NHL’s protection lists are submitted, George McPhee has rights to every single exposed player in the Expansion Draft. 50+ goalies, hundreds of defenseman, pushing 1,000 skaters, McPhee owns every last one of them… for three days.

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